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Father Brown - The Secret Garden

constantly elevating the eyebrows. He saw Father Brown, of Cobhole, in Essex, whom he
had recently met in England. He saw--perhaps with more interest than any of these--a tall
man in uniform, who had bowed to the Galloways without receiving any very hearty
acknowledgment, and who now advanced alone to pay his respects to his host. This was
Commandant O'Brien, of the French Foreign Legion. He was a slim yet somewhat
swaggering figure, clean-shaven, dark-haired, and blue-eyed, and, as seemed natural in an
officer of that famous regiment of victorious failures and successful suicides, he had an air at
once dashing and melancholy. He was by birth an Irish gentleman, and in boyhood had
known the Galloways--especially Margaret Graham. He had left his country after some crash
of debts, and now expressed his complete freedom from British etiquette by swinging about in
uniform, saber and spurs. When he bowed to the Ambassador's family, Lord and Lady
Galloway bent stiffly, and Lady Margaret looked away.


But for whatever old causes such people might be interested in each other, their distinguished
host was not specially interested in them. No one of them at least was in his eyes the guest
of the evening. Valentin was expecting, for special reasons, a man of world-wide fame,
whose friendship he had secured during some of his great detective tours and triumphs in the
United States. He was expecting Julius K. Brayne, that multi-millionaire whose colossal and
even crushing endowments of small religions have occasioned so much easy sport and
easier solemnity for the American and English papers. Nobody could quite make out whether
Mr. Brayne was an atheist or a Mormon or a Christian Scientist; but he was ready to pour
money into any intellectual vessel, so long as it was an untried vessel. One of his hobbies
was to wait for the American Shakespeare--a hobby more patient than angling. He admired
Walt Whitman, but thought that Luke P. Tanner, of Paris, Pa., was more "progressive" than
Whitman any day. He liked anything that he thought "progressive." He thought Valentin
"progressive," thereby doing him a grave injustice.


The solid appearance of Julius K. Brayne in the room was as decisive as a dinner bell. He
had this great quality, which very few of us can claim, that his presence was as big as his
absence. He was a huge fellow, as fat as he was tall, clad in complete evening black, without
so much relief as a watch-chain or a ring. His hair was white and well brushed back like a
German's; his face was red, fierce and cherubic, with one dark tuft under the lower lip that
threw up that otherwise infantile visage with an effect theatrical and even Mephistophelean.
Not long, however, did that salon merely stare at the celebrated American; his lateness had
already become a domestic problem, and he was sent with all speed into the dining-room with
Lady Galloway on his arm.


Except on one point the Galloways were genial and casual enough. So long as Lady
Margaret did not take the arm of that adventurer O'Brien, her father was quite satisfied; and
she had not done so, she had decorously gone in with Dr. Simon. Nevertheless, old Lord
Galloway was restless and almost rude. He was diplomatic enough during dinner, but when,
over the cigars, three of the younger men--Simon the doctor, Brown the priest, and the
detrimental O'Brien, the exile in a foreign uniform--all melted away to mix with the ladies or
smoke in the conservatory, then the English diplomatist grew very undiplomatic indeed. He
was stung every sixty seconds with the thought that the scamp O'Brien might be signaling to

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